Parched Excerpt

In this haunting, lyrical novel told from three perspectives, Sarel has just witnessed the violent murder of her parents. But she is not completely alone on the drought-ridden land. Nandi is the leader of a pack of dogs who looks out for her pups and for skinny Sarel-girl. Nandi knows they are all in trouble, and she knows, too, that a boy is coming—an escaped prisoner with the water song inside him. A hard-hitting but ultimately hopeful survival story. - See more at: http://www.hmhco.com/shop/books/Parched/9780547976518#sthash.qmVgkSEK.dpuf

Scraps of plywood covered every gap in the rusted walls. A rat scampered across the sloping roof. It was quiet in the dim room, except for the sound of shallow breathing. A key scraped in the lock and the door swung inward, spreading a rectangle of yellow light across the floor. A boy huddled in the corner, his face buried in the crook of an arm. Flies landed on seeping scabs at his wrists and ankles. Sivo crossed the dusty floor, his steel-toed boots tramping out the sound of the boy’s breath. “That’s him. That’s the dowser,” Sivo said to the guard waiting in the shadows of the doorway. A scar
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cut across his cheek and over his lips, pulling at his mouth when he spoke. “Musa,” Sivo said. But the boy didn’t move, even at the sound of his name. “Get up.” Sivo bent to undo the padlock at Musa’s ankles, and the boy flinched, the chains around his wrists clanging against each other. Sivo clipped a leather leash onto the links between Musa’s wrists and yanked him up, dragging him outside. The guard in the doorway backed out of reach, lifting a hand to cover his nose as they passed. Outside, Musa closed his eyes against the glare of the midday sun and raised his face to the sky. The rubber toe of his canvas shoes flapped open with each step. A drop of sweat slid down the ridges of his bare spine. He almost made it to the jeep, but he stumbled on a rock jutting out of the hard dirt. Sivo yanked him upright with a sharp tug on the leash. Musa crawled into the back seat. He lay unmoving, his eyes crimped shut. The jeep rocked as the men climbed in and slammed the doors. As soon as the engine rattled to life, Musa curled into a ball, gathering his bleeding wrists to his chest. The pain that flared up his arms and legs was always at its

Musa

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worst in these moments, when a breeze washed over his broken skin, when the sun glinted off the links of the chains that held him. When life out of that dusty shack, and away from the Tandie, hovered at the edges of his sight. The city streets were clogged with rusted-out cars stripped of their tires and tilting at odd angles. Only two men walked the streets under the glaring sun, their black hair matted with dust and their lips cracked and bleeding. They stared at the jeep as it passed, its blaring music fading out of tune as it rattled down the street. After winding and bumping through the ruined roads for nearly an hour, the jeep stopped. Musa lurched in the back seat, barely catching himself from spilling onto the floor. Sivo stepped out and threw open the back door, shaking a ring of keys as he leaned over the boy. Dangling off the edge of the seat, Musa slid to the ground. He swayed on his feet, the weight of the chains bowing his thin shoulders. “No funny business,” Sivo said as he bent to undo the padlock holding Musa’s hands together. Musa clenched his teeth as the chains grated
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Musa

against the sores on his wrists. There was a click, then the clanking of falling metal. His arms fell to his sides, and blood rushed to fill his fingers. “What you waiting for, boy?” “Thirsty . . .” Musa whispered. “That’s what we’re here for, ya?” Sivo said, his hands bent backwards on his hips. When Musa didn’t move, Sivo reached into the jeep and pulled out a dusty water bottle, its sides nicked with small white creases. He held the bottle upside down at arm’s length and squeezed a stream into the boy’s mouth. The water was warm and tasted like the plastic drum it had been stored in for months. Musa swallowed, the back of his tongue clicking against the roof of his mouth for long moments after the stream of water had stopped. An ache rose in his belly and his jaw fell slack. “That’s it. Go on.” Sivo shoved a pair of thin forked sticks into Musa’s chest. Musa’s arms folded over them. He turned and scuffed away from the jeep. With a stick clasped in each hand, he lowered his forearms until they stuck out from his body like a long-legged insect. He closed his eyes, and listened.

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S A R E L e e e

3

Sarel woke, screaming. The sound bounced off the walls of the underground room. She lay in a curve of bony knees and elbows, the mortared stones of the grotto floor carving dents into her flesh. Her body sagged, sapped. Her eyelids quivered with memories that kept her from sleeping. Sarel clutched at her throat, raw from smoke and screams and hot tears. Her skin was smeared with soot. When she blinked, ash drifted down onto her cheeks. Under heavy lids, her eyes, the color of a tide pool stirred by a storm, stared at the stones. Flat. Empty. Thirteen black-mouthed dogs spilled down the
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curving stairs and pooled on the pebbled floor all around her. The air, still laced with smoke, hung heavy in the small, round room. Sarel uncurled, her mind slow with things like how she had gotten there and why she was lying on the ground, a weight as heavy as stones pressing into her chest and shoving the air from her lungs. Nandi stood over her, sniffing at her breath and licking the soot from her face. Watching Sarel as if she were one of her own pups, skittish and stunned. Sarel hadn’t risen from the grotto floor since the flames had leaped from the roof of the house to race through the tinder grasses, chasing her away from the twisted, still bodies of her parents. Chasing her to this underground place of quiet, and cool stones, and pooled water. The sound of agony, of labored breathing and crushing pain, filled the small room. Sarel set her breath by it, and she opened the ache in her chest to it. The sound inched closer. It echoed against the curved walls. It pressed against her, nuzzled at her. It cut through the blur in her mind and laid the memories bare. Sarel clamped her hands against her ears, against

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the shouting, the gunshots, the sound of the dogs baying in their kennel. She squeezed her eyes tight. Shut out the sight of her father’s body soaking the ground with blood, of her mother’s hands, limp, still coated with a dusting of flour. The memory was gone as quickly as it came, leaving Sarel gasping for air. She curled back into herself, and a wail rose in her throat. When Sarel woke again, the sound was still there, but softer and pitched higher. She sat up, blinking. Nandi lay beside her, watching, waiting. Sarel lifted a hand to graze the underside of Nandi’s jaw. The pups pressed in close, ears pricked, tails tucked between their legs. They nipped at Sarel’s ankles and licked her unresponsive face. But that sound — it was more than the whimpers of thirsty pups. Sarel twisted to face it. On the other side of the grotto pool, Ubali lay on his side, panting, each breath a cry of pain. Sarel crossed the pebbled floor on her knees and leaned over him. She drew her fingers along the velvety tip of his ear. His tail thumped once, but he didn’t try to lift his head.

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Sarel

Sarel’s eyes skittered to a knuckle-size hole in Ubali’s shoulder that leaked maroon blood onto the stones beneath him. She yanked back her hand. The word formed on her tongue, and she curved her lips around it. Bullet. She had to get the bullet out. Panic came in rapid-fire breaths, scraping against her throat and pounding into the weight that crushed her lungs. She couldn’t do this. Not by herself. Teeth gripped her arm, startling, steady. Nandi held Sarel’s forearm between her jaws, her eyes clamped onto the girl’s stricken face. Sarel gulped in air until her breath slowed, until the pounding in her head faded. She lifted her eyes to the pebbled ceiling and pressed two fingers into the wound, digging, probing, slipping in the place where blood met bone. Ubali’s cries slackened. With a gasp, Sarel hooked her finger around a lump of metal. Wincing, she pulled the bullet up and out. It fell to the stones, slick with blood. Ubali lifted his head off the ground and grunted, twisting his neck to lick the wound clean. Sarel stared at her hands. They were covered with

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blood that clung like webs between her fingers. She would have to go up and scrub them in the sand until they were scraped clean. Up where the air was still heavy with soot. Up where the bodies of her parents lay in the charred dirt. Nandi crossed to the stairs and waited. Sarel followed, her bloody hands stretched out in front of her.